Saudis Discipline Venezuela, OPEC's Weakest Link

In part due to a popular game show, everyone knows the saying that "a chain is only as strong as its weak(est) link." This saying holds especially true with commodity cartels during periods of price downturns. Now is one of those periods for oil producers as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) grapples with the possibility of protracted low prices due to a global economic slowdown and significantly increased US production. I am quite happy as an oil consumer, but the most vulnerable OPEC member, Venezuela, is not. Grappling with galloping inflation, goods shortages, high crime and generally unbearable living conditions, cratering oil prices were the last thing it needed. As such it's been calling on other OPEC members to cut production. However, the Saudis are having none of it and sent their emissary to Venezuela to silence the socialist wannabes:

Top officials from major oil producers Venezuela and Saudi Arabia
held a rare bilateral meeting Wednesday as OPEC member countries grapple
with a continuing price slump. Venezuelan Foreign Minister
Rafael Ramirez,
who until recently was head of state energy giant Petróleos de
Venezuela, or PdVSA, and is the country’s OPEC representative—and Saudi
Oil Minister
Ali al-Naimi
usually meet at scheduled gatherings. But the two convened on the
sidelines of a climate conference on the Venezuelan resort island of
Margarita in a sign of the pressure building up on the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries amid crude oil’s price drop of more
than 25% since the summer.

The two countries hold opposing attitudes toward the price slump. Venezuela’s public finances are reliant on high prices
while the Saudis are reluctant to take steps to support prices by
cutting its oil output. This week, Saudi Arabia lowered the price for
crude sold to the U.S.—a move seen to maintain its market share for
exports to the country.

Here we have a game-theoretic example of how a "sock it to the weakest link" strategy will pan out. Instead of investing proceeds when oil prices were high in improving production facilities and hence output--even with the help of (heaven forbid) foreigners--Venezuela has unwisely chosen to divert proceeds into all sorts of pseudo-socialist projects like funding an uncompetitive Formula One driver. Venezuela is an inefficient and therefore high-cost producer whose breakeven price for extraction is of a magnitude higher than Saudi Arabia's. The latter prefers to wait it out; can US shale producers with their newfangled techniques sustain themselves at these lower prices levels? The Saudis don't think so and are prepared to duke it out. Meanwhile, Venezuela is literally bankrupting itself at these selfsame levels:

During past oil-price slumps, the group has acted collectively to
rein in production to support prices. This time, its influence over the
market has become limited because much of the oil flooding markets comes
from booming shale-oil production in the U.S. that is beyond the
group’s control. That has effectively left OPEC members reluctant to cut their output in an increasingly competitive environment.

“Al-Naimi
is going to explain to Ramirez that not much can be done at the moment
and it is a cycle the market is going through,” said another Saudi
official. Of the OPEC members, Venezuela has been the most vocal
about the rapid slide in oil prices since June. Last month, it made an
unheeded call for an emergency meeting of the group.

Even before
prices plummeted in the summer, Venezuela was confronted with a weak
economy. The steep price drop in the commodity that makes up to 96% of
the Venezuela’s export revenue has compounded its economic challenges. President
Nicolás Maduro
has seen his popularity plummet to a record low, according to
polls, as dollar shortages have led to a precipitous decline in the
value of the local bolívar currency and contributed to scarcities of
food and consumer goods.

While the analogy is imperfect, think of Germany and Greece in the EU. The threshold for a strong euro currency is much higher for Germany than it is for the 50-pound weakling of EMU economies, Greece. Saudi Arabia has an ulterior motive of testing the waters of American extractive efficiency. It is leaving Venezuela high and dry by making the excuse that the supply boom is due to a producer outside the cartel, but a true cartel would not just stand around and do nothing. Also see Daniel Yergin on this matter.